"[ I]ntellectual history at its best. Lucid, deeply contextual, and at once penetrating and compassionate, the book provides an essential frame for understanding our own turbulent age." * American Historical Review * Everywhere we look, pundits tell us that resentment is taking the world by storm. But what is resentment? And how and when did it become so central to political life? Schneider, noted historian of early modern Europe, gives this political emotion the long, deep contextual history it needsand thus illuminates our own present. * Sophia Rosenfeld, author of Democracy and Truth: A Short History * I am deeply impressed by Schneiders latest workhis writing is clear and cogent, and the argument he makes is compelling and convincing. He ranges over a great deal of material, yet he presents it both carefully and gracefully. The Return of Resentment bristles with ideas and is rich with insights. * Robert Zaretsky, author of Victories Never Last: Reading and Caregiving in a Time of Plague * The Return of Resentment shines a powerful light on the role of emotion in European and American politics across the past two centuries. Erudite and penetrating, Schneider's book brilliantly analyzes why resentment has returned again and again to unsettle American democracy. An indispensable guide to our time. * Gary Gerstle, author of The Rise and Fall of the Neoliberal Order * A wonderfully creative book, The Rise of Resentment takes an emotion that seems entirely of our amnesiac moment in politics and culture and demonstrates that this emotion has a rich and controversial history. Schneider moves deftly between act and idea. He shows us why resentment is so prevalent today, while illustrating what resentment is and how it works. This book is a guide to the past and an intellectual roadmap for the future. * Michael C. Kimmage, author of The Abandonment of the West: The History of an Idea in American Foreign Policy * "The Return of Resentment moves along a number of narrative tracks. . . its long final chapter refers to a sizable portion of the more thoughtful books in the 'what the hell is going on?' genre called forth by the past several years. Growing economic inequality, changing demographics and social norms, and algorithmic echo-chamber effects are all familiar and credible factors. Schneider goes beyond them to consider our tendency 'to think of resentment as an emotional trait of otherswhich is to say the embittered and angry left-behind and threatened.'" * Inside Higher Ed * "[ An] impressively wide-ranging history of the concept (and, in one chapter, the practice) of resentment." * Times Literary Supplement * "This is a much-needed book, which provides us with a nuanced and historically informed understanding of resentment, from which we can learn a great deal about contemporary politics." -- Christian F. Rostbųll * Cambridge University Press * "Schneider makes a compelling case that 'the return of resentment' now poses the greatest threat to social cohesion in the US. This is intellectual and political history at its most illuminating and compelling. . . . Essential." * Choice * "The book speaks to those interested not just in resentment per se but also its intersections with history, political theory, and the study of emotion, as well as contemporary American politics. . . . . It presents its reader with a thought-provoking and extensive survey of how resentment is understood and may take shape, all in a manner that is wonderfully readable." * Political Science Quarterly *